I don't have any experience with their routers but I've got a TP-Link wireless N USB adaptor that works great, much better than my old Buffalo one, it's solid and feels well-made. I liked it so much that I bought one for my parents and theirs has been doing a very good job for 6 months now.

I think when someone uses all capitals to show the product's country of origin, presumably in a derogatory fashion, that reduces the person's credibility by at least 50%. Which routers are not made in China nowadays?

BamBam0099

Senior Member

posted: Nov. 19, 2012 @ 5:39a

lousygolfer said: SuperLottoPlus said: ....

I think when someone uses all capitals to show the product's country of origin, presumably in a derogatory fashion, that reduces the person's credibility by at least 50%. Which routers are not made in China nowadays?

It's not derogatory, it's a "fact" to many of us just as many Americans prefer to buy products that say "Manufactered in America" or in the US. I just did a google on "routers not made in china" and there are many, many posts of people with real life experiences centered on buying cheap products manufactured in China.

Thanks for the post reply SuperLottoPlus

lousygolfer

Senior Member - 3K

posted: Nov. 19, 2012 @ 4:17p

BamBam, I'll concede that we're not totally at philosophical odds, as I will always put back a package of shrimp or other food at my local grocery store that has a "Product of China" label on it - I want my food to comply with 21st century First World health standards and prefer to support businesses that are, if not local, at least American. I will generally also check the "Located in USA" box on eBay's search engine when I am looking for some sort of small electronics, so that I'm dealing with a seller located in the US and won't have to ship all the profits out of the country and certainly not, ironically, to a communist country (of course, most of those items are still made in China) or have to worry about whether I'm one of the 20% of orders that it seems that some Shanghai sellers deliberately don't ship, figuring that no one's going to bother about a $2 item.

However, I think it's naive to think that one can simply say "I want a good-ol' fashioned, made right here in the Yew-Ess-of-Ay! electronics item, unless you're talking about some sort of relatively high-end audio-video equipment. Most electronics items (at least inexpensive ones) are either made in China or made from a significant number of Chinese parts. I did your suggested google search and the very first link contained a lot of responses that were essentially "Yeah, good luck on finding a router that's NOT made in China." You do realize that even a company that's as representative of the all-American success story as Apple has almost all of its products (certainly iPhones, iPods, and iPads) made by Foxconn in China?

NICKel

Senior Member - 1K

posted: Nov. 28, 2012 @ 1:03p

I bought this for HD streaming off my server.... SO far my laptops and my Galaxy 3 can see the 5ghz part of the router. But the only device I need it for, the XBOX slim is not seeing it on wirless. Any thoughts?

chauek

New Member

posted: Nov. 28, 2012 @ 3:03p

From what I read, 5GHz band does not work under DD-WRT for this router.

mcdull

Ancient Member

posted: Dec. 10, 2012 @ 1:32p

BamBam0099 said: lousygolfer said: SuperLottoPlus said: ....

I think when someone uses all capitals to show the product's country of origin, presumably in a derogatory fashion, that reduces the person's credibility by at least 50%. Which routers are not made in China nowadays?

It's not derogatory, it's a "fact" to many of us just as many Americans prefer to buy products that say "Manufactered in America" or in the US. I just did a google on "routers not made in china" and there are many, many posts of people with real life experiences centered on buying cheap products manufactured in China.

Thanks for the post reply SuperLottoPlus

Saw this when looking for a router to replace a Belkin Play N600 running Tomato which was dead after some eletric shock when I was out town (even with a surge protector and a battery backup, so I have no idea why) which has been running great except so so signal distance.I have to go back to a 3 years old TP-Link router temporary. I like that the one I have I can change out the external antenna for a stronger one, though the stock ones are fine. It does occasionally drop connnection every few weeks, it's ok otherwise, so not going to get another unless some stellar review. Buyt at least it can handle heavy torrent traffic than another D-Link before it which would crash when there was more traffic.

Anyway, using your logic, you need to tell this to millions of Americans using or buying iPhone and iPad made in sweat factories in China. And I bet you are not using any Apple products, are you?It's the product design and quality control that make a good product, not where or which country it is made.

I think when someone uses all capitals to show the product's country of origin, presumably in a derogatory fashion, that reduces the person's credibility by at least 50%. Which routers are not made in China nowadays?

It's not derogatory, it's a "fact" to many of us just as many Americans prefer to buy products that say "Manufactered in America" or in the US. I just did a google on "routers not made in china" and there are many, many posts of people with real life experiences centered on buying cheap products manufactured in China.

Thanks for the post reply SuperLottoPlus

Saw this when looking for a router to replace a Belkin Play N600 running Tomato which was dead after some eletric shock when I was out town (even with a surge protector and a battery backup, so I have no idea why) which has been running great except so so signal distance.I have to go back to a 3 years old TP-Link router temporary. I like that the one I have I can change out the external antenna for a stronger one, though the stock ones are fine. It does occasionally drop connnection every few weeks, it's ok otherwise, so not going to get another unless some stellar review. Buyt at least it can handle heavy torrent traffic than another D-Link before it which would crash when there was more traffic.

Anyway, using your logic, you need to tell this to millions of Americans using or buying iPhone and iPad made in sweat factories in China. And I bet you are not using any Apple products, are you?It's the product design and quality control that make a good product, not where or which country it is made.

Have you check the power adaptor of your Belkin N600 with a multi/volt meter? maybe it's just the power adaptor that is fried...

altoidboy

Member

posted: Dec. 14, 2012 @ 9:42a

Rebate is expired.

NICKel

Senior Member - 1K

posted: Dec. 14, 2012 @ 10:50a

KPACOTKA said: Good deal unless you stream HD Not sure why would you say this?

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